A couple faces the overwhelming reality of raising a child with autism, leading to a profound transformation in their relationship.
As stress mounts, the wife adopts a rigid communication style based on therapy, creating a widening chasm between her and her family.

AITAH for telling my wife to marry her expletive therapist because I am expletive done?





























As noted psychologist Dr. John Gottman explains, ‘The presence of contempt, criticism, defensiveness, and stonewalling in a marriage is highly predictive of divorce.’ The situation described here suggests a severe breakdown in healthy communication, where professional psychological concepts are being misapplied to justify interpersonal conflict rather than resolve it.
The wife appears to be utilizing ‘therapy speak’ as a defensive mechanism to establish control in an environment where she feels overwhelmed. When complex psychological terminology is used to label normal relationship struggles as abuse, it often leads to a ‘pathologizing’ of family dynamics. This creates a power imbalance where one party’s perspective becomes treated as objective truth, effectively silencing the other party and preventing genuine conflict resolution.
While the husband’s frustration is understandable given the neglect of his older son, his decision to insult the therapist likely exacerbates the wife’s defensiveness, further isolating her. A more effective approach would be to shift the focus away from the therapist and toward the objective needs of the children, perhaps by proposing family-focused counseling with a neutral third party who can address the family system as a whole rather than validating individual grievances.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.









If they include “SW,” such as LISW or LCSW, you want to contact your state’s licensing board for *social workers.*
And if they’re PhD, that’s a *psychologist*, contact your state’s licensing board for them.


The husband feels his wife is neglecting their family by weaponizing psychological concepts to label his actions as abusive. He believes her therapist has encouraged this destructive behavior, while she views his rejection of these labels as a form of manipulation.
Is the husband justified in blaming the therapist for his wife’s behavioral shifts, or is he failing to acknowledge the complex ways his wife is processing her own trauma and the demands of parenting an autistic child?







